“So, we need to plan our move. Now that you know where it is can you lead us there quickly?” Bradley asked.
“Si. If we have a clear day within the next day or two, we’ll easily be able to make it there in one shot. I know exactly how to find the place.”
“What if we get there and he turns out to be a cannibal?” Deacon asked, laughing at the three men’s earlier fear of him and Sophia.
“Being a better man, I’m going to ignore that little jab,” Bradley said with a smile, “but what I’m not going to ignore is the ‘we’. Do you plan on going with us?”
“Well we’ve talked about it while you two were out. If you don’t mind, we’d like to get the hell out of this place. Sometimes it’s nice to change things up a bit.”
“I have no problem with you coming with us,” Guillermo stated as he looked around at the others.
Bradley agreed. There was power in numbers, and he knew they needed all the power they could find. Roger remained silent as usual. He just listened, giving no sign of what he was thinking about.
The group settled in for the night. There was no need to discuss plans anymore. All they had to do was make it from where they were now to the boy’s “safe house” and everything would be fine. This boy was just a short distance from here, and he had better food and running water.
Early the next morning, Bradley was woken by Deacon, who seemed concerned. Bradley looked around the attic as his eyes adjusted. Still half asleep, he wasn’t entirely sure of what was happening. His arm was asleep from where Emalynn had slept on it. He gently moved her off him, hoping not to wake her.
“What’s the problem?” Bradley asked, looking up at Deacon.
“Your boy Roger seems to have gone downstairs. The attic door is open, and he seems to be the only one of us that’s no longer here.”
“Ok. Did you go looking for him downstairs? Maybe he’s just getting some fresh air.”
“No, I just noticed the door was open. Figured I’d wake you first. Everything seems quiet down below right now though.”
“I’ll go look for him. Get some rest,” Bradley climbed to his feet, rotated his arm to circulate some blood, pulled his shoes on, and quietly made his way down the stairs leading out of the attic. The house below was quiet. No sound could be heard.
The front door was wide open. The sun hadn’t come up yet, but its light could be seen in the sky. Bradley stepped through confidently and looked around. There was no sign of anything. The neighborhood was empty. Roger couldn’t be seen from the front yard, so he walked through the house and out to the back. It still felt great to just walk through the grass again.
Peeking over the fence, he could see there was nothing in the streets to the south of them either. Bradley began to think that this would be the perfect time to move out. He continued to watch, it would be nice to lie in the grass and watch the sun come up. That would have to wait, however, as he felt now was the time to leave. Looking around one last time for Roger, he turned and walked back into the house. Pulling the attic door shut behind once he made it back.
“I think now’s the time. Get everyone up and ready,” he said to Deacon as he pulled the door shut.
The group took several minutes to wake up. Bradley debated on whether they should eat before deciding that a very light meal would be fine. He knew there was a chance they would need as much energy as possible.
“Excuse me, sir,” Andy said as he tugged on Deacon’s pant leg. “I can’t find Herbert, and he was really excited about coming with us.”
“What happened to Herbert, honey?” Sophia asked Deacon rhetorically. The look she gave him could make even the toughest man cry.
Deacon only responded by picking up a piece of shredded meat with his fingers and stuffing it in his mouth. By the time everyone was packed up and ready the sun was coming up over the hills to the east. They were all glad to be outside once again.
With the town being this clear, it was time to move. Bradley nodded as if to say, “Time to go,” and they set out into the street. Sophia turned back to see her home one last time. They had cleaned a couple rabbits, and a few cats, to bring with them, the rest were set free before setting out. Even Amie let Princess Shirley go so she could be with her friends.
Bradley felt bad about leaving Roger even though he knew that Roger had left them. They were so close to making it somewhere safe. A small victory. Perhaps that isn’t what Roger wanted. There was no time to wait around hoping for his return. If he wants to find them, he will know where they went. He knew the plan.
The sky was becoming brighter as they crossed into the yards on the other side of the street. The lack of fiends almost made Bradley more nervous. He had been watching them move around in the streets for long enough to know that there was always one or two out there, but today there was nothing. Perhaps Roger had led them away, whether intentionally or not.
He couldn’t allow the thoughts to linger. Images of Roger flooded into his mind. The man lay in the street, bones broken, back torn open to reveal his mangled spine. What remained of the fiends wandering off with fresh blood down the front of them, chewing on a kidney, or perhaps a lung.
Bradley shook the thoughts aside and focused on now. There were people relying on him to deliver them to safety. He can’t let anything happen to them.
They moved along the sidewalk for a few blocks. Bradley, Guillermo, and the children walked along one side, while Deacon and Sophia walked the other. Guns were not usually the first weapon of choice for Bradley, as the noise attracted other fiends, but the calm streets didn’t sit well with him. Both handguns were out and ready to fire. Guillermo also had the handgun Jonathan had given him.
“That’s it. Just up there,” Guillermo pointed to a house at the end of the street several blocks away. Across the street from the safe house sat a dirty blue station wagon. Guillermo knew most of this area well.
Roger appeared down one of the side streets heading toward the west side of town. He was barely able to run, and he could hardly breathe. “Help!” he yelled, waving his arms in the air.
“Guillermo, get the others to the safe house. I’ll catch up,” Bradley ordered before running off to help Roger.
“Si. I’ll come back for you when everyone else is safe.” Turning to Emalynn he said, “Everything will be ok. Just stick with me, señorita, and I’ll come back out for him. Now help me get the little ones to safety.”
Guillermo and the others sped up to a jog. The road in front of them was still clear, and they could see Jonathan at the top of the wall. He pushed the taller of the ladders over to the other side as they approached. It made a soft thud as it hit the small patch of grass between his massive wall and the sidewalk.
After the long jog, Sophia climbed the ladder as she made it to the wall first. Deacon stayed at the bottom to help the others. He stood ready as Guillermo approached with the children.
Guillermo pushed Amie and Andy up the ladder first. Sophia helped them make their way down the other side, and Jonathan helped them off the ladder. Guillermo turned around to wave Tyson along, but noticed that Tyson wasn’t behind him. Instead, the boy turned the corner and ran toward Bradley and Roger.
“Tyson!” Guillermo yelled. “I’ll help them, you get back here and over the wall,” He tried to run after the kid who was already turning down the side street. Before he could, however, he was grabbed by a fiend and dragged to the ground. He kicked his way free, only to stand up into another one.
Several blocks down and around the corner, Bradley reached Roger, who was limping; a horde of fiends was close behind. The shuffling of their feet, some with shoes, others bare, could be heard as loud as their mournful cries. The sight of them was horribly amazing. Roger had managed to attract every fiend for several blocks.
He lifted Roger’s arm up over his shoulders to support the man and said, “Let’s get you to safety.” Their eyes met, Roger’s hard panting slowed to a normal breath. Bradley could see something sinister in th
e man’s face. A disturbing lack of humanity peered back at him with a fiery intensity.
Roger stopped moving and stood up straight, the horde closing in. With a quick motion he drove the carved hook of his desk leg through Bradley’s left knee. The kneecap shattered with a gruesome cracking sound. The hook tore through the ligaments and stuck through the back.
Bradley screamed as the pain in his knee exploded through his body. His knee wouldn’t bend at first; Rogers' hook prevented it from doing so. He fell to the ground hard on the other knee. His left leg stuck straight out behind him.
“I lost everything,” Roger calmly said as he looked down at Bradley who had sweat running down his face from the pain. “I won’t be the only one to lose it all and watch as everyone else finds new life in this desolation. You think I don’t know that you want to rub it in MY face that YOU found love?” Roger’s temper flared up the more he spoke.
The sound of shoes slapping the concrete caused Roger to turn in time to see Tyson running at him. The boy slammed into Roger with all his strength, knocking him to the ground a few feet from Bradley.
Tyson stepped over to Bradley, and without any warning he pulled the hooked end of the desk leg from his knee. For an instant, Bradley felt nothing. His ears rang loudly and the world spun before him for what seemed an eternity. When the pain finally rushed to his head, Bradley gritted his teeth and muffled his scream.
The fiends were closing in on them quickly. Their moans and shuffles grew louder. “If you get up now, we can make it to the others,” Tyson said in a demanding tone. The fiends moved in closer with each passing second.
“Just go!” shouted Bradley, who was consumed by the pain, and he signaled for Tyson to leave him.
Tyson shook his head in protest and continued to pull the injured Bradley to his feet. Surprise and pain battled at once to take control of Tyson, who dropped Bradley. Blood poured from the boy’s stomach. A look of confusion and sadness crossed his young face. Roger’s hook protruded from Tyson’s stomach as he dropped to his knees in the middle of the street.
“I’m sorry, boy,” Roger said with sympathy in his voice that was genuine yet brief. “But you did this to yourself. You can’t meddle in grown up business.” He turned up the street and ran out of sight around the corner.
Bradley no longer felt his own pain. Rage fueled his body, and adrenaline did the rest. He stood and lifted Tyson up in his arms. The boy’s laborious breathing was raspy and shallow. Bradley moved as quickly as he could, but they were still a block away from rounding the corner that would put them on the street to the safe house.
Grinding from his knee was audible with each strenuous step he took, but he wasn’t going to leave this boy to die here. He came around the corner to see Guillermo helping Roger toward the ladder. Emalynn stood on top of the wall screaming and waving to him. He couldn’t see Roger’s face, but he knew the man must have been shocked to see them still alive.
He was grabbed by his hair and shirt. “I’m so sorry,” he said to Tyson as they were pulled to the ground. Bradley still tried to move forward. “You’re a hero for coming back for me, and I failed you.” The fiends punched and kicked at him as they started their brutal assault.
Tyson put a bloody hand on Bradley’s cheek and smiled through the pain. The boy’s own face was covered in blood mixed with tears, but he didn’t cry because of the pain. He knew his life was coming to a painful end. His mouth moved, but the only sound was a raspy gargle. Their eyes locked onto each other’s as neither wanted to see what was about to happen.
The pain in Bradley’s knee was nothing compared to the first bite to his shoulder. It felt as though it was ripped open and the wound was set on fire. Tyson was pulled from his hands and quickly lost in the horde before Bradley had the chance to react. His muffled screams brought Bradley more pain then he had ever felt before. He didn’t even try to hold back his sobs as he began to cry for the boy.
Emalynn could be seen as if Bradley was looking at her through gaps in a wall. Beautiful rays of light through a picket fence of disease. She tried to run to him. Guillermo, whose shirt was torn and bloody from his own encounters, quickly grabbed her around the waist and carried her up the ladder as she kicked and pleaded.
Roger took one more look at what he had done before dropping down the other side of the wall. He knew he had made a terrible mistake. A year’s worth of building anger and jealousy turned him into a monster no better than the ones roaming the streets. Not only did he kill a good man, but he murdered an innocent child. He turned as tears filled his eyes.
Flesh was ripped in a sheet from Bradley’s arm. Although the pain was unbearable, he screamed only to block out the screams coming from Tyson, whose stomach was being ripped open. His intestines were dragged over by where Bradley was laying. He let Tyson down. In his eyes he deserved what was happening to him. The pain would be his punishment, and he would accept that.
The pain stopped quickly, however. The hard concrete turned red with his warm blood as he lay there with his face on the street. Each heartbeat pounded in his head as the noise around him slipped away into the distance. Bradley wanted to close his eyes and let this life go, but his eyes wouldn’t shut. Occasionally, he could see the light of the sun break through the horde as if it was teasing him playfully. Soon all light faded away, leaving him in darkness.
Emalynn fought to free herself from Guillermo and Deacon. Her screams echoed through the town. Jonathan took the ladders away to discourage her from trying to go after Bradley. They stood on the inside of the gate and watched as Bradley and Tyson were swallowed up by the horde.
Andy and Amie cried for their fallen friend. Tyson had been with them for many months, and now he was gone. He had risked his life on several occasions to keep them alive. They also shed tears for this man who had rescued them from the supermarket and brought them somewhere safe.
Sophia hugged Emalynn tight, and they went to their knees together as the two men let them go. Sophia knew the pain Emalynn felt. Everyone has lost too many loved ones, and it would never be easy. Emalynn buried her face in Sophia’s chest and wept.
Guillermo looked on after Roger as he vanished around the back side of the house. Roger hadn’t stopped to help as Guillermo finished off the last of the fiends that had attacked him. Instead he just climbed the ladder and turned to watch up the street. For a man who was just injured and out of breath, Roger appeared to be moving along just fine.
Jonathan didn’t cry for either of them. He had not been honored with the chance to meet them, yet he felt the sadness that the others felt. As he walked up behind Andy and Amie, who were both looking through the gate, he overheard them talking to each other. Kneeling down beside them, he realized that they were talking about the blue car across the street. Amie turned and stared hard into Jonathan’s face.
“What is it?” he asked.
“That’s my mom’s car,” Andy responded, as he pointed to the Dodge Magnum.
Jonathan stood up and stared out at the car. Beyond that, the horde that had taken Bradley and Tyson roamed. Many of which were moving this way. The fence was strong, he knew that, yet he didn’t want to test out exactly how strong it was.
“We need to get inside please,” he looked at the disheveled group. “I know you are all in pain, but we really need to go inside now.”
As everyone began moving toward the house, Jonathan took one last look out at the car and the dead bodies closing in on it. The memory of his father rushing out to help flooded his thoughts. As he looked out through the gate he could see his father pull the children from the car and point up the hill. Then he turned back to try and help the woman. Jonathan saw nothing after that, but these children can fill in the blanks and tell him what happened to his father.
Chapter 15
Over the following three days, the group made Jonathan’s house their home. They each told their stories and recounted their experiences with the fiends. Jonathan found it interesting and appropriate that
they referred to the undead this way. He couldn’t help but wonder about the twins’ story. The sight of their mother’s car seemed to have stirred up painful memories for them, and Jonathan wanted to give them time before confronting them. They were too young to have to deal with what was happening.
Emalynn was given Jonathan’s room after he moved into his parent’s. She barely came out. It took hours to calm her down after the loss of Bradley. She seemed to also feel responsible for Tyson. After calming down, she apologized numerous times for not waiting for him to go first. Jonathan wanted to comfort her, but he didn’t know how.
Roger set up camp out in the back yard after helping Jonathan dispose of the dead girl’s body. Jonathan provided him with a tent and other camping supplies that they had acquired over the years. He also made Roger aware that he was welcome to come and go as he pleased. Roger wouldn’t tell his story. All he would say is that as far as he knows, his wife and children were gone, and he would remain alone on this planet.
Guillermo was more than happy to share his stories. Although he had many experiences with the fiends, not many of them were of any use in understanding them. He was also very proud of his heritage and enjoyed sharing his mother’s recipes to make amazing meals. Assuming she was no longer alive, he thought this was a great way to honor her.
“She loved to cook,” he said while making Spanish rice and chicken enchiladas. The pride he felt couldn’t be hidden. “She would cook for the whole town. Any time my friends came over, she would start cooking like it was a holiday or something.”
Deacon talked of being a firefighter in Australia before coming here on vacation. Several years were spent in Los Angeles. While trying to revive a teenage gunshot victim, a close friend of Deacon’s was shot to death by a rival gang that obviously didn’t want the teen saved.
Decay | Book 1 | Civilization Page 14